Crisis and the unconscious: another look at the lifeworld
In his last published work, the Crisis of the European Sciences, Husserl introduces the question of the »lifeworld« (Lebenswelt) in connection with his diagnosis of a crisis in the modern sciences and in opposition to the self-understanding these sciences have of the ›world‹ and also of cons...
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I33-R139-123456789-183392024-06-28T05:01:43Z Crisis and the unconscious: another look at the lifeworld Rabanaque, Luis Román Husserl, Edmund, 1859-1938 FILOSOFIA CONTEMPORANEA CRISIS FENOMENOLOGIA CIENCIA In his last published work, the Crisis of the European Sciences, Husserl introduces the question of the »lifeworld« (Lebenswelt) in connection with his diagnosis of a crisis in the modern sciences and in opposition to the self-understanding these sciences have of the ›world‹ and also of consciousness. What does it mean that the sciences are »in a crisis«? Husserl discusses two senses of this expression.1 In a first sense, internal to science itself, there can be a crisis if »its genuine scientific character, the whole manner in which it has set its task and developed a methodology for it, has become questionable« (Hua VI, 1 [3]). To this possibility, the objection can be advanced that such a questioning is groundless, not only with regard to the exact natural but also to the human sciences. But in a second sense, which is not internal to the practice of science, it is still possible to say that there is a crisis because science no more deals with the most essential questions of human existence, those questions that are »decisive for a genuine humanity« (Hua VI, 3–4 [6]). Despite the theoretical achievements and the material ›prosperity‹ modern sciences have brought about, Husserl claims that they have been progressively losing sense for human life. This is so because the very demand for objectivity that characterizes them has eventually led them to abandon any reference to the specific problems and concerns of humankind... 2024-06-27T10:19:36Z 2024-06-27T10:19:36Z 2023 Parte de libro Rabanaque, L. R. Crisis and the unconscious: another look at the lifeworld [en línea]. En: Inverso, H.-Schnell, A., (eds.). Crisis and Lifeworld. New Phenomenological Perspectives. Baden-Baden: Karl Alber, 2023. Disponible en: https://repositorio.uca.edu.ar/handle/123456789/18339 978-3-495-99486-3 https://repositorio.uca.edu.ar/handle/123456789/18339 eng Acceso restringido http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/ application/pdf Karl Alber En: Inverso, H.-Schnell, A., (eds.). Crisis and Lifeworld. New Phenomenological Perspectives. Baden-Baden: Karl Alber, 2023. |
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Universidad Católica Argentina |
institution_str |
I-33 |
repository_str |
R-139 |
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Repositorio Institucional de la Universidad Católica Argentina (UCA) |
language |
Inglés |
topic |
Husserl, Edmund, 1859-1938 FILOSOFIA CONTEMPORANEA CRISIS FENOMENOLOGIA CIENCIA |
spellingShingle |
Husserl, Edmund, 1859-1938 FILOSOFIA CONTEMPORANEA CRISIS FENOMENOLOGIA CIENCIA Rabanaque, Luis Román Crisis and the unconscious: another look at the lifeworld |
topic_facet |
Husserl, Edmund, 1859-1938 FILOSOFIA CONTEMPORANEA CRISIS FENOMENOLOGIA CIENCIA |
description |
In his last published work, the Crisis of the European Sciences, Husserl
introduces the question of the »lifeworld« (Lebenswelt) in connection
with his diagnosis of a crisis in the modern sciences and in opposition
to the self-understanding these sciences have of the ›world‹ and also
of consciousness. What does it mean that the sciences are »in a crisis«?
Husserl discusses two senses of this expression.1
In a first sense,
internal to science itself, there can be a crisis if »its genuine scientific
character, the whole manner in which it has set its task and developed
a methodology for it, has become questionable« (Hua VI, 1 [3]). To
this possibility, the objection can be advanced that such a questioning
is groundless, not only with regard to the exact natural but also to
the human sciences. But in a second sense, which is not internal to
the practice of science, it is still possible to say that there is a crisis
because science no more deals with the most essential questions of
human existence, those questions that are »decisive for a genuine
humanity« (Hua VI, 3–4 [6]). Despite the theoretical achievements
and the material ›prosperity‹ modern sciences have brought about,
Husserl claims that they have been progressively losing sense for
human life. This is so because the very demand for objectivity that
characterizes them has eventually led them to abandon any reference
to the specific problems and concerns of humankind... |
format |
Parte de libro |
author |
Rabanaque, Luis Román |
author_facet |
Rabanaque, Luis Román |
author_sort |
Rabanaque, Luis Román |
title |
Crisis and the unconscious: another look at the lifeworld |
title_short |
Crisis and the unconscious: another look at the lifeworld |
title_full |
Crisis and the unconscious: another look at the lifeworld |
title_fullStr |
Crisis and the unconscious: another look at the lifeworld |
title_full_unstemmed |
Crisis and the unconscious: another look at the lifeworld |
title_sort |
crisis and the unconscious: another look at the lifeworld |
publisher |
Karl Alber |
publishDate |
2024 |
url |
https://repositorio.uca.edu.ar/handle/123456789/18339 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT rabanaqueluisroman crisisandtheunconsciousanotherlookatthelifeworld |
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1807949572010409984 |